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their support and comfort as they Semis eat BEATS CCC have in their country’s service. Dickinson, N, D, ee 3 21. “Given under my hand and the/ Dickinson ‘state Great Seal of the State of North Da- PRbed 10m 96 40.0, eeiseey Ga kota, at my office at the capitol, in]/New England CCC camp football the city of Bismarck, this twenty-| team here Thursday. fifth day of September, 1935.” By ae Acting Governor: Japan does not decorate its soldiers for fravery in action. my as your heart may dictate ana! your means permit, “It is my earnest hope that we will, through our support and encourage- ment, show these poor boys whose broken bodies are constant remind- ers of their greatest sacrifice, that we too, have not forgotten and that we give as freely and as willingly to Additional. ociety *l'Thursday J Musical ti to Bring Famous Harpist Upon completion of arrangements, at the initial meeting of the season Thursday, the Thursday Musical club announces that it will sponsor an appearance here Oct. 8 of Alberto Salvi, native of Venice and interna- NerbaR Eeee) WELFORD PROGLAINS FORGET-ME-NOT DAY D. A. V. Members’ Wives Will I ‘ALTER WELFORD. ~ »,,Coming Marriage of Miss Knoll Is Told Announcement of the engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Knoll, daughter of Mr. and # «; Frona ’ Mrs. Andrew Knoll, Mandan, to H. Lester Farrell, son of Mr. and Mrs, Clyde A. Farrell, also of Mandan, was made at a 7 o'clock bridge din- ner to which 20 friends of the bride- elect were invited given Thursday evening by Mrs. Knoll and another daughter, Miss Rose Knoll. The wedding will be an event of Oct. 26 and will be solemnized at St. Joseph’s Catholic church, Mandan. The date and names of the engaged couple were written on, gold hearts hidden in the rosebud corsages mark- ing the places of the guests. In keep- ing with the corsages, the tables were centered with bouquets of the same flowers. 74 The Misses Jean Crawford and >" Treten Saunders won score honors at bridge. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Oliver Sorsdahl, sister of the prospective bridegroom, of Bismarck and Miss Fay Ione Smith. of Long- view, Wash. who is visiting Miss Crawford at Mandan and also is vis- iting Bismarck relatives and friends. Mr. Farrell is employed by the Bis- marck branch of Grant-Dadey com- peny. i * # * Public Is Invited to Mrs. Fickel’s Speech The general public is invited to *\ hear Mrs. June Fickel, Washington, D. C., associate director of the Dem- ocratic party’s women’s division, when she speaks in the Bismarck City Au- ditorium at 8:30 ,o’clock Saturday evening. Former Gov. Thomas H. «, Moodie, state WPA director, will in- troduce the speaker, who is conclud- ing a series of North Dakota appear- ances at this time. Arrangements have been completed by a committee of men and women Democratic workers headed by Mrs. ‘Thomas J. Haggerty, women’s chair- man for Burleigh county. Among her assistants were Mmes. Theodore Serr and 8. M. Culbertson, Mandan, and ‘Thomas H. Tharalson and A. A. Jones, Bismarck. Musical entertain- ment will be vocal solos by Leonard McMahon, Mandan. Mrs. Laura Wahl Pulscher, con- nected with the WPA $ffices here. at-| Pure Silk MRS. A. W. PLACHTE The 1935 fall roundups of the Amer- ican Legion Auxiliary will start at La Moure Oct. 3 with Mrs. Plachte of Wahpeton, tenth district committee- woman, presiding. The second meet- ing is scheduled for Milnor at 8 o'clock the same day. tended the meetings conducted by Mrs. Fickel at Fargo, Grand Forks and Minot and reports very successful gatherings at each place, particularly Grand Forks where a luncheon was held. Mrs. E. P, Quain, state chair- man of Democratic women’s activi- ties, joined Mrs. Fickel at Minot Wednesday and was with her for ap- pearances at Williston Thursday and Dickinson Friday. At each gathering Mrs. Fickel reviewed New Deal ac- tivities and policies wet will do here Saturday. Mrs. Fickel and Mrs. Quain are ex- pected to arrive shortly after noon Saturday and if it is possible Mrs. Haggerty will arrange a dinner in honor of Mrs. Fickel, who will be making her second visit to the city in her official capacity. Democratic county chairmen and others from an area extending cast to Jamestown and to the first coun- ties west of the Missouri are expected to be here for the mesting. ee H Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carter, Grand Forks, have returned home after a visit. with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. O. I. Devold, 115 Avenue B, They also visited friends at-Devils Lake and motored through the Badlands. * Oe OK Pi chapter of Alpha Phi sorority at the University of North Dakota an- nounces the pledging of Miss Kath- leen Ray, Medora, at ceremonies at the chapter house. Full Fashioned ‘| RINGLESS. tionally known harpist, and an in- strumental quartet. Tickets for the concert will be offered in the near future. In the quartet traveling with Salvi are Oscar Chansow, violin; Harold Newton; viola; Ernest Guntermann, flute, and Alfredo Mazzari, violin- cello, Music lovers will remember, that with the addition of the harp’ this will make the same ensemble as was heard here in the concert given by the famous Paris Thsromental quintet two seasons ago. The Bismarck city auditorium has been engaged for the concert. The committees named by Mrs. O. I. De- Vold, president, are Mmes. A. J. Arnot, Carl L. Lewis and W. J. Tar- gart, ticket sales, and Mmes. J. K. Larson, Merton J. Orr and Opie S. Rindahl, publicity. A piano recital. played by ee members and arranged by Mrs. Adolph Johns was the first program of the new year. Performers and their numbers were: “Prelude in C” from the Well-tempered Clavichord, Bach—Mrs. Arnot; “Chromatic Fan- tasie,” Bach—Mrs. E. D. Rose; “Chimes of St. Patrick,” Whithorne— Miss Marie Lemohn; “Dance of the Gnomes,” Liszt—Mrs. John ‘L. Hughes, and “Staccato Caprice,” Vogrich—Miss Florence Fritch. Mmes. Frank Barnes and J. A. Graham served refreshments. Mrs. Walter Hobe of Minneapolis, former club member who is the house guest of Dr. and Mrs. M. W. Roan, at- tended the meeting. * # % ‘The series of pre-nuptial affairs be- ing given for Miss Bathilda Hess, Mandan, who will be married to James Bernard Tonskemper of Du- luth, Minn., at St. Mary's procathe- dral here Oct. 12, was continued Wed- nesday with a bridge luncheon for 12 given by Mmes. B. S. Nickerson and Charles F. Ellis. Score awards went to Mmes, B. M. Porter and Frank Wetzstein. Baskets of gladiolus and dahlias used in the rooms emphasized the gold color note in the luncheon appointments. # *# * Mrs. Marie Durey, Patterson hotel, and Miss Lavina Brosz, Ashley, are at Washburn after spending two days at Minot conferring with Mrs. S, M. Lindgren, state manager of the Wood- men Circle, They are members of the northwest field force and with lother field workers were guests of |Mrs, Lindgren at a dinner given in a Minot hotel. A fall campaign has been planned for October, November and December, in which Mrs. Lind- geen is to offer a cash prize. * * ® St. Anne’s missionary group held the second meeting of the current \ssason Wednesday evening at the | home of Mrs, Frank Lee, 614 Third St. [Contract games at two tables in | Which Mmes, Charles A. Verret and ‘C. I. Nelson won honors were followed by luncheon, Mrs. Howard Wood, | 415 Griffin Si., will be hostess for the | Oct. 9 meeting. | * % % | Mrs. H. P, Asselstine and her |daughter, Mrs. M. G. McNally, enter- |tained eight guests at a quilting par- G.i ot Devils Lake, prominent clubwoman MRS, A, M. POWELL Heading the North Dakota Daugh- ters of the American Revolution for the coming year will be Mrs. Powell of the state, who was named regent Thursday at the closing session of the -19th annual conference held at Dickinson. APPARENT LOW BIDS ON ROADS SELECTED No Offers Made on Three Jobs Because of WPA Man Hour Restrictions Apparent low bids on six roads and structural projects were announced Friday by the state highway depart- ment, as contracts were prepared to be let on cigs $500,000 of highway work. Because of WPA man-hour restric- tions, highway department officials ing projects, two in Slope and one in Golden Valley county. Department officials said they be- lieved the high number of man- jhours required on the projects Hel WPA restrictions led contractors to make no bids on the projects. ‘Those whose bids were announced as low were: Graham Asphalt company, Bis- marck, $21,792.45 for 0.7 miles of pav- ing in Hettinger. | Megarry Brothers, Bismarck, $30,- }119.60 for 5.2 miles of paving south of Minot; Butler Construction company, Grand Forks, $28,883.51 for 14.1 miles of graveling; Huston and Mackley, Jamestown, $2,157.92 for construction of a bridge south of Wellsburg; Rue Brothers, Bismarck, $9,470.31 jfor construction of two small struct- ures in Minto and near Minto. T. M. Swingen, Minot, $15,132.72. structure north of Larimore. Fifteen WPA roads and structural construction projects are included in the letting. M’Adoo Crashes Pole, sponsor Saturday is urged in a proc: Meuse-Argonne offensive, which of- said. no bids were filed on three grad-. Sell Flowers in Business Section Saturday Support of the Forget-me-not sale which North Dakota units of the Dis- abled Veterans of the World war wil! lamation issued Friday by Gov. Wal- ter Welford. Part of a nationwide drive, the sale recalls the 17th anniversary of the | curred Thursday, and is staged in behalf of the men wounded in the war. The SBismarck-Mandan unit is Joining in the sale under direction of Roy Dow, Mandan, commander, with Robert J. Dohn ad 8, A. Ravnos as Bismarck and Mandan chairmen, Tespectively. Mrs. J. C. Spare heads & group of local D.A.V. members’ wives who will conduct the local sale in the downtown section with the Grand Pacific ‘hotel as headquarters. Governor Welford’s proclamation follows: “Whereas, it has been customary for all states to join together in set- ting aside a special day for the sale of forget-me-nots by the disabled American veterans of the World war, and “Whereas, these boys gave of them- selves willingly and gladly in the terests of their country and to the isn and uplifting of mankind, ant “Whereas, they have in this service become disabled and cannot provide for themselves through the regular channels of human endeavor, and “Whereas, these same veterans are now trying to be of assistance in providing for their care by the mak- ing and sale of forget-me-nots, “Now, therefore, I, Walter Welford, acting governor of the state of North Dakota, do hereby proclaim Satar- day, September 28, 1935, as forget-me- not day, and I particularly urge each and every one of you to aid and sup- port this worthy effort of our dis- abled veterans by giving as gener- One old cow will wash your clothes—Just trade her cream check for a Cor- Car at Power Washer at ble’s. Porcelain Tub, }j Carbetatie Wringer with }| cane release — Powered with Briggs and Stratton Motor, $6.00 down, $1.50 per week. | —In the largest single self-contained motor car factory in the world, thou- sands of veteran Buick workmen have focused for tavo years on perfétting Sour new series of phenomenal automobiles, and now they offer these to the public in full confidence that they dramatically verify the traditional Buick pledge: ‘‘When better automobiles are built, Buick will build them."” Take Taxes In Your Stride There probably never was or will be a convenient time for taxes— they always fall due just at the wrong time. Nevertheless, they must be paid and the best way to pay them is on time. If paying the second half of your 1934 real esate taxes is going to take more cash you can spare, see us about a Personal Loan. Very possibly we can help you take taxes in your stride with a low-cost loan payable in convenient install- ments within a year. FACTS ABOUT PERSONAL LOANS Any resident of Bismarck, steadily employed and of legal age, is eligible for a Personal Loan. Loans up to $500 are made for legitimate purposes on personal notes secured either by collateral or by the signatures of two responsible co-makers who live in Bismarck. The rate is only $6.00 per $100.00. Loans are repaid by convenient deposits in our Savings De- partment over a period of twelve months. Applications are held in strict confidence and @ acted upon promptly. A helpful, convenient, dignified, easy-to-pay way of borrowing. Personal Loan Department FIRST NATIONAL BANK BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Affillated with First Bank Stock Corporation I’m always HAPPY because my boy friend always takes me to The Stag (Mandan’s Entertainment Palace) Where we dance to the music of Bill Smail and his Society Rhythm Kings and listen to PAUL GOODMAN sing. We find THE STAG the best in Bismarck-Mandan for dancing, refreshments and entertainment. (Phone Mandan 574 for Reservations) NAILING OUR FLAG TO THE MASTHEAD * ON DISPLAY AT ALL BUICK SHOWROOMS SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28™ ‘si |ty, which was concluded with a 5| Fractures His Nose/ ,Stnderd | ‘o'clock luncheon with appointments — Say BUICK BUICK 1 Oo in the autumn colors, Thursday af-} tos Angeles, Sept. 27—(#)—Sen. Groups ternoon. Mandan guests were Mrs./ william Gibbs McAdoo made light on all SPECIAL .CENTURY \M. J. Grainer, another daughter of| priday of injuries suffered in an au- Models $ an ' Mrs. Asselstine, and Mrs. Frank Froe- | tomobile accident here, in which his at Extra 51035": HOSE The Famous No. 135 Beautiful sheer Chiffon A Quality That Is Regularly Sold for $1 Hoee with every feature of the regular $1 Stockings. We are very for- tunate—and very proud to be able to offer Hose lich. | * # *& ;_ Mr. and Mrs. John Heater and Mrs. ; Louis F. Smith, all of Mandan, are ; home after a trip to Seattle, Wash., jto visit with the father of Mmes. \Hener and Smith. ee © Mrs, Peter Ripple and Miss Lucille Dahners of Mandan have returned from St. Paul, where they spent a jfew days with Miss Eleanor Ripple Who has enrolled as a freshman at | the College of Saint Catherine. * e# | Visiting in Bismarck and Mandan Thursday were Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stockwell, Chris Larson and Miss Marian Jones, all of Beach. ee & Mrs. Olive LaGrave and son, Royce, of 510% Fourth St., are to spend the next few days at Mrs. LaGrave’s farm near Esmond. ———_—_—¢ jhe a | Today’s Recipe | —_—______.______» Swedish Meat Balls i These meat balls may be partly pre-| pared beforehand, so that all that is necessary at meal times is to reheat them, Use 1 pound ground beef, 1 egg, 1 tablespoon potato flour or corn starch, 1 small onion, chopped, % cup milk, ginger, black pepper, salt. To the ground beef, add the egg Partially beaten, potato flour or corn starch, and onion, chopped. Moisten with milk and season with salt, and a tiny pinch of black pepper and ginger. Mix well. Dip the hands in- to water, and form the mixture into balls the size of a large walnut. Fry in butter or beef suet until nicely browned, add a very small amount of water, about 2 tablespoons, cover, and cook until the meat balls are done. Dance at Masonic Temple nose was fractured and lacerated so badly six stitches were required. “The worst of it is that I may not be able to go to Boulder City Sunday, where Mrs. McAdoo and I had planned to meet President Roosevelt,” said the 71-year-old senator who last week married 26-year-old Doris Cross. The accident occurred Thursday when McAdoo drove his car against a light pole to prevent striking an- other machine, KEEPING YOUR SHOES IN GOOD CONDITION— is easy when you use our shoe repairing service. It is a service that results in real foot comfort, improved appearance, economy and all-round satisfaction, It means better-looking, longer- wearing shoes for the men, wo- men and children of this con- munity. Give us a trial and test our ability to please you. CAPITOL 5765 cost. BUICK ROADMASTER $1255 % ONE LOOK AT THESE PHENOMENAL FOUR... YOULL SAY BUICK LIMITED *1695 © BUICKS THE BUY!’ ‘WO years ago Buick deliberately leveled its sights on 1936. It coolly set its aim on bringing to market for that year a line of motor cars that would startle the world. It purposed to do that, not by freak or super- ficial design, not by skimping quality to make a price, but by sheer merit as expressed in auto- mobile beauty, value, ability. It submits to you now the eminently satistying engine such safe, thrilling performance as you have never known. These cars are big cars every one—built to almost lavish dimensions of body room and head clearance — yet they handle with the fingertip lightness of small cars. They are literally breath-taking in power and speed and take-off, yet under their new tiptoe hydraulico and easy-steering knee-action they are almost as manageable as a telephone. rp of this fine quality at a price so low. Saturday, Sept. 28. All M SHOE HOSPITAL A They are thewed and sinewed by that quality os Genuine Ringless— 42 Gauge— iad trigsie levied: Dancing — » of that fruitful two years of concentrated which springs from Buick’s third of e century a Knit on a three carrier 4-thread knit for sheer- begins at 9 p. m. = . of manufacturing experience, advantaged by . ., ness and serviceability. Here are four separate series of sensationel $14,500,000 worth of new tools, dies and factory Indictdually Inspected for Quality and Perfection! NEW FALL SHADES Caribou, Highnoon, Smokemist, London Mist—All of the most popular new fall shades are here to match your wardrobe! Service Weight ineluded. Ask for No. 145 in Service, No. 135 in Chiffon. Wait Until I Call the Wife - BLUE POINTS ON + CARL WHYTE And We'll All Go Over to the Patterson IT’S A TREAT ! !:!! TO DINE AT THE PATTERSON HOTEL “Just Wonderful Food’ Biectstelly Onaton! Bred Steaka tnd Chops. All ‘foods cooked HALF af the PIANO, new Buick cars—cars called phenomenal by ex- perts in the trade who previewed them. ~ Each is a feast to the eye schooled in mature . modern styling, as you can see. Bach has under the smooth flowing planes and re-equipment devised for these cars slone. These things are so true and so obvious that everywhere you will soon hear the motor-wise saying, “BUICK’S THE BUY!” eurfaces of its emart exterior, the solid, tough, durable, beautifully engineered chassis that under- writes Buick dependability. And each offers you from the stepped-up power of its big thrifty valve-in-head eight-cylinder First OF THE . G@ENERAL MOTORS CARS 100 Rresdvay, west Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. Bismarck, N. D.